Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Microsoft Russia shows apparent Internet Explorer 9 interface



Though Microsoft has released four previews of Internet Explorer 9 over the past six months, none of them included much of a user interface. The company was keeping that under wraps, with the first public unveiling happening in a few weeks, on September 15. But with an apparent mistake by one of Microsoft's Russian Web properties, it looks like the secret might be out: the site posted a screenshot that apparently shows the new browser UI, as noticed by Mary-Jo Foley at ZDNet.
Though the blog post has now been deleted, it's still currently available in the Bing cache. As well as the single screenshot, the site described five features of the new browser. Some of these are well-known—standards compliance, performance—but the site also described new user interface features.


The leaked screenshot
The machine translation of the page isn't entirely clear, but it suggests that the new browser will allow tabs to be torn off from the browser window (as already found in Chrome and Safari, for example), and that there will be some kind of provision for creating icons for specific sites, perhaps something similar to Chrome's application mode.
Most striking is the new interface that Internet Explorer 9 will apparently include. It has been pared down and simplified, with the multiple menu buttons of the Internet Explorer 8 toolbar condensed to a single menu. The tabs, address bar, and toolbar have all been condensed into a single row.
The screenshot does have a number of odd features, however. The styling of the back and forward buttons is reminiscent of the style used—and abandoned—during the Longhorn development process, with the back button larger than the forward button—a design also found in Firefox.
The buttons are also unusual in that the oversized back button appears to be truncated at the bottom, where it runs into the actual browser frame, which looks both ugly and inattentive. Also surprising is that Microsoft has, apparently, switched to using the same reload icon as found in Chrome, Firefox, et al.—a single clockwise circular arrow—instead of the paired arrows that it has been using since Internet Explorer 1.
The amount of space available to tabs seems extraordinarily small. It's possible that they overflow onto a second row to make more room, but as shown in the screenshot, they look extremely cramped. The decision not to show the webpage's title in the window title bar is also odd. Chrome doesn't show the page title in the title bar because it uses the title bar for tabs; Internet Explorer 8 and Firefox both duplicate the information, as it means that the full page title can be visible even when the tabs are small.
Also surprising is that the screenshot shows a single bar used for both page addresses and searches. Previously Microsoft has said that this design is a privacy flaw: it means that any Web address typed into the browser is sent to the chosen search engine to allow search-as-you-type. If the picture is accurate, it means that Microsoft has done a surprising about-turn on that privacy issue.
There's also a question of when this screenshot was taken. The taskbar clock is peculiarly obliterated, eliminating the obvious indicator, but the Bing page opened in the browser gives some contradictory clues. The Bing daily photo was used for Bing China back in January and Bing USA in August last year, and Bing changed the appearance of the menu on the left back in May, which suggests that the pictures are old. However, the recent searches can be no earlier than June, due to the mention of Kinect.
The incongruous Bing content could simply be a repercussion of the marketing team using mock-ups, but if the page content is mocked up, anything else could be too—to the extent that the entire browser window could be a mock-up or prototype.
If this is a taste of what's to come with Internet Explorer 9, it's certainly going to look simpler, with more room dedicated to Web content than browser chrome. But the graphical oddities and small space left for tabs give reason to be skeptical; the browser we see next month may not look like this after all.

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